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November 28th, 2006

Sniffing out Microsoft's 'OS in the cloud' skunk-works project

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 10:19 am

Categories: Corporate strategy, Windows Live, Windows client

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As I blogged yesterday, there’s a skunk-works project inside Microsoft under Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie that is dedicated to turning Windows into an Internet service. But what does that mean, exactly?

On Tuesday, November 28, I had a chance to pose that question to Steve Berkowitz, the Microsoft senior vice president in charge of Windows Live. Berkowitz wasn’t willing to completely open the kimono on Microsoft’s future plans. But he did help me put the secret “OS in the cloud” project in context.

“Over time, we’re figuring out how Windows Live (meshes with) Windows,” Berkowitz explained. “It’s not so much a set of features that makes Windows what it is. Windows is a bunch of feature sets.” And in the future, some of these features will reside in the “Internet cloud,” while others will reside locally on PCs, cell phones and other devices.

Microsoft already is beginning to turn that part of the vision into reality with Windows Vista. With Vista, Microsoft will offer users links via which they can download a number of Live services, including Windows Live Messenger, Windows Live Mail Desktop, Windows Live Mail and Windows Live OneCare.

Some Windows users believe that, going forward, Microsoft will decouple more and more of the currently integrated Windows features and make them available as free and/or paid Windows Live and/or MSN services. Rather than continuing its past behavior – which did little to endear the company to antitrust regulators, competitors and partners – Microsoft will bundle fewer and fewer brand-new features into future builds of shrink-wrapped Windows, some Windows watchers say.

So that’s the first step toward turning Windows into more of an Internet service. But there’s more happening as part of Ozzie’s OS in the cloud strategy, according to Berkowitz. Windows Live isn’t just a bunch of services; it’s an evolving development platform, too.

As Microsoft outlined earlier this year, the Live developer platform consists, at the core infrastructure level, of common contacts, identity and storage services; and at the common services level, of search, adCenter, presence, mapping and mobile services. Microsoft’s goal is to make the Live cloud look like the Windows platform, and the Windows platform look like the Live cloud, Berkowitz said.

“If we can make it so we are untethering you from your device, you will be able to have the consistent identity accessible to you from anywhere,” he said.

Microsoft is looking to identify the core assets — a user’s address book, calendar, favorites, secure sign-on credentials – that are at the heart of both Windows on devices and Windows and the cloud and turning them into the uber-Windows platform, Berkowitz continued.

“If you take Windows apart – take all the whiz-bang stuff out – (there’s) the common platform, the core. Ray (Ozzie) believes if he can develop that layer, that is the true development platform,” Berkowitz said.

And with Microsoft being Microsoft, the ultimate goal, of course, is to convince developers that by building on top of Microsoft’s – rather than anyone else’s — common core, they will have the best tools, the most reliable datacenter/support infrastructure and widest reach.

Bottom line: Windows Live, if Ozzie has his way, will be a leaner, meaner set of services that finally will deliver on Microsoft’s promise of computing anywhere, any time and on any device.

What do you think, readers? Is such a vision feasible? Do you see anything that will stop Ozzie and his cloud cohorts from realizing this goal? And do you think Google – in spite of its claims that it has no intentions of creating a GoogleOS – could beat Microsoft at its own game?

Mary Jo FoleyMary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years. Don't miss a single post. Subscribe via Email or RSS. You can also follow Mary Jo on Twitter.

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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Most Recent of 59 Talkback(s)
Some good chat between Jack Schofield and Jeff Raikes on related stuff
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Posted by: stevecla Posted on: 12/27/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
It is an interesting idea...  bportlock | 11/28/06
Head in the clouds  Al S Cook | 11/30/06
The "Live" Cloud  seaky2000@... | 11/28/06
Windows sells.  Anton Philidor | 11/28/06
Only because Microsoft made it rare to find a PC with no or alt OS  slim-01 | 11/28/06
Screw building the whole PC.  nomorems | 11/29/06
Building my own this time means rebuilding to new one is cheaper  slim-01 | 11/29/06
Build Your Own = Cheaper  Cardhu | 11/30/06
De-Bloating?  swenzn | 11/28/06
Ahh yes the good ole days...  Sysop1984 | 11/28/06
...and better OS's could run under 16mb too...  lmedina@... | 11/29/06
Deja vu all over again  bmgoodman | 11/28/06
Good point....  MGP2 | 11/28/06
100% in agreement with you...  Sysop1984 | 11/28/06
Wrong  jcg_z | 11/29/06
Some good chat between Jack Schofield and Jeff Raikes on related stuff  stevecla | 12/27/06
To quote Billy Idol....  Mike Cox | 11/28/06
Its the Killer Web Service  mighetto | 11/28/06
XBOX 360 is triple-core  THEE WOLF | 11/28/06
Arent the same people that...  Sysop1984 | 11/28/06
Xbox360 has 3 full cores, PS3 has 1 + 7 lesser cores...  Narg | 11/29/06
hmmm...Microsoft only anyone?  nomorems | 11/29/06
open the kimono????? Puh-lease  rad1956 | 11/28/06
What is wrong with you? Are you jelous because she writes well? The phrase  DonnieBoy | 11/28/06
retire it, please!  andyILM | 11/28/06
It Is A Very Common Phrase  Cardhu | 11/30/06
It is all very feasable and very doable. Microsoft needs to make sure that  DonnieBoy | 11/28/06
DirectX  shryko | 11/28/06
It already exists ..its called Vista  ggibson1 | 11/29/06
A Question  Okkio | 11/28/06
Yes, the offline problem is a thorn in the side for all of the web  DonnieBoy | 11/28/06
How might it be achieved...?  roberto_maietta@... | 11/28/06
Learn-ed!  moffett.john@... | 11/28/06
Maybe...maybe not  craftycorner@... | 12/01/06
Learn-ed! The OS to See the Wizard  moffett.john@... | 11/28/06
The new mix  THEE WOLF | 11/28/06
Avoiding a future of Rent a software is on my Top 10 Reasons to Use Linux  slim-01 | 11/28/06
Absolutely true...  Sysop1984 | 11/28/06
Very true Ubuntu that I use is Debian based  slim-01 | 11/29/06
What He Said, Was  Ole Man | 11/28/06
Imagine A Bunch Of Gray-Suiters  Cardhu | 11/30/06
Web OS, better then a kill switch  DarthRidiculous | 11/28/06
One diets, another bulks  carmilevy@... | 11/28/06
Key issues to me are:  akcoyote | 11/28/06
security of online apps and storage.  pfyearwood | 11/28/06
Dependency based revenue  whisperycat | 11/29/06
Oh, I Agree  Cardhu | 11/30/06
Its a paradigm shift!  wittgenfrog | 11/29/06
Hogwash  Ole Man | 11/29/06
Ecosystems Are Biological Networks  Cardhu | 11/30/06
Passport revisited  BobF_z | 11/29/06
Hello "Bob"  Reverend MacFellow | 11/29/06
MS's HEAD is in the clouds...  Narg | 11/29/06
Linux in the clouds  knot_mine | 11/29/06
Windows as a web app, no. Windows with web app integration, yes.  Been_Done_Before | 11/29/06
Windows OS has Recalls  thefrosted1@... | 11/29/06
It's Feasible...  SecurityGeek_z | 11/29/06
Network Security Issues?  t1nyturtle | 12/01/06
"clouds" for thin clients  craftycorner@... | 12/01/06

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